The most common and well known symptom in people who do succumb to them is bone pain, either in the joints or the bone itself. The bone is much softer and weaker than it should be which makes it easily susceptible to deformities, fractures and tingling and weakness from nerves pinched by enlarged vertebrae.
Paget’s disease, though not necessarily life threatening, is a gateway of sorts to other medical conditions. Though …show more content…
Some are taken through the mouth and others by injecting the substance in the patient’s body, e.g. Ibandronate (Boniva). There are some side-effects such as the death of jaw muscles and dental diseases, but the pain relief seems worth it to some who continue to medicate on them and are known as the number 1 treatment.
Calcitonin are similar to the drugs mentioned above and tend to reduce the risk of complications in surgery like excessive and fatal bleeding and drastically reduce pain in affected areas. They are usually injected into the body of the patient.
Surgery is used, but only in few rare cases to increase the healing of fractures, replaced severely damaged joints, realign bones deformed by Paget’s disease and diminish the pressure on the nerves pressed against the deformed bone. Because of the excessive blood vessels produced by the deformed bone, fatal bleeding in surgery it what makes it so rare to be used as treatment and remains that way today.
Though there are options to help treat Paget’s disease there is no known cure, but science develops more and more each day and someday soon maybe there will be hope for people who suffer like those with Paget’s